Lessing, Dorisin full Doris May Lessing, original name Doris May Tayler ( born Oct. 22, 1919 , Kermanshah, IranBritish Kermānshāh, Persia [now Iran]British writer whose novels and short stories are largely concerned with people involved in the social and political upheavals of the 20th century. She was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2007.

Her family was living in Iran Persia at the time of her birth but moved to a farm in Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), where she lived from age five until she settled in England in 1949. In her early adult years she was an active communist. In Pursuit of the English (1960) tells of her initial months in England, and Going Home (1957) describes her reaction to Rhodesia on a return visit. In 1994 she published the first volume of an autobiography, Under My Skin; a second volume, Walking in the Shade, appeared in 1997.

Her first published book, The Grass Is Singing (1950), is about a white farmer and his wife and their African servant in Rhodesia. Her Among her most substantial work is her works is the series Children of Violence (1952–69), a five-novel sequence about that centres on Martha Quest, who also grows up in southern Africa and settles in England(published in 2 vol. as Children of Violence, 1964–65). The Golden Notebook (1962), in which a woman writer attempts to come to terms with the life of her times through her art, is one of the most complex and the most widely read of her novels. The Memoirs of a Survivor (1975) is a prophetic fantasy that explores psychological and social breakdown. A master of the short story, Lessing has published several collections, including The Story of a Non-Marrying Man (1972) and Stories (1978); her African stories are collected in This Was the Old Chief’s Country and The Sun Between Their Feet (both 1973).

Lessing turned to science fiction in a five-novel sequence titled Canopus in Argos: Archives (1979–83). The novels The Diary of a Good Neighbour (1983) and If the Old Could… (1984) were published pseudonymously under the name Jane Somers to dramatize the problems of unknown writers. Later Subsequent novels include The Good Terrorist (1985), a novel about a group of revolutionaries in London, and The Fifth Child (1988), a horror story, to which Ben, in the World (2000) is a sequel. Her many and varied works of fiction and nonfiction display her interest in women’s issues, politics, and The Sweetest Dream (2001) is a semiautobiographical novel set primarily in London during the 1960s, while the parable-like novel The Cleft (2007) considers the origins of human society. Her collection of essays Time Bites (2004) displays her wide-ranging interests, from women’s issues and politics to Sufism.